Publications by authors named "G Haquin"

A rapid method for determining low activity concentrations of Pb in drinking water was developed and tested. The method consists of a few stages for sample preparation that involve passing 12 L of water through a column with acrylic fibers implanted with MnO (used to adsorb Pb). The MnO fibers are oven-dried, compressed and measured by a broad-energy germanium detector used to quantify Pb via its characteristic 46.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explored how changes in atmospheric temperature affect the flow of radon underground using a specialized climate-controlled lab, revealing that warming decreases radon concentration while cooling increases it, with significant rates of change observed.
  • - Radon flow was driven by temperature gradients, leading to a 30% change in concentration; cooling caused a rapid increase due to differences in air-soil temperatures, while overall molecular diffusion changed by around 7%.
  • - The research found a strong link between temperature cycles and radon concentration oscillations in low-frequency cycles (4-8 days), but this correlation weakened at higher frequencies, providing insights into underground radon behavior.
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Nuclear simulation methods were applied to two systems that investigate radon transport within geological porous media: a) a laboratory system built to test, under controlled climate conditions, the effect of temperature on radon transport, and b) a field monitoring system comprising gamma and alpha detectors in an abandoned water well. The use of Monte Carlo simulations of NaI and BGO scintillation detectors in continuous underground radon measurements by gamma counting, to estimate the photon flux in the detector volume, is presented. The advantages of shielding side-view NaI detectors were demonstrated for a laboratory system containing ground phosphate rock, including avoiding high counting rates and reducing the effective source volume in radon transport studies.

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The dependency of radon emanation on soil texture was investigated using the closed chamber method. Ground phosphate rock with a large specific surface area was analyzed, and the presence of inner pores, as well as a high degree of roughness and heterogeneity in the phosphate particles, was found. The average radon emanation of the dry phosphate was 0.

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The radiation dose to the population of Israel due to exposure to natural sources of ionizing radiation was assessed. The main contributor to the dose is radon that accounts for 60% of the exposure to natural sources. The dose due to radon inhalation was assessed by combining the results of a radon survey in single-family houses with the results of a survey in apartments in multi-storey buildings.

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